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Social Media Addiction in Little Rock, AR

If your child has been harmed by any of the following platforms: Instagram, TikTok, Facebook, YouTube, or Snapchat, you may have a case against these companies. Edward O. Moody, P.A., is here to help.

A Public Health Crisis Hidden in Plain Sight

Parents in Little Rock and all over Arkansas watch their kids spending hours every day scrolling through social media feeds, and they are also seeing their kids suffer more and more. Young people are becoming more and more depressed, anxious, self-harmed, and have eating disorders due to social media use. More and more evidence suggests that this is not an accident, and the people who created these platforms have made them in such a way that people want to use them constantly. The law is starting to hold these people accountable.

The U.S. Surgeon General issued a formal advisory warning about the potential risks of social media to the mental health of children and adolescents in 2023. This warning was supported by independent researchers from institutions like the American Psychological Association, who had reached similar conclusions. For families in Little Rock who have experienced the negative effects of social media firsthand, these findings were not surprising – they confirmed what they had seen in their own lives.

How Social Media Platforms Engineered Addiction in Young Users

Instagram, TikTok, Facebook, YouTube and Snapchat are platforms that kids spend the most time on. These platforms are not just for talking to each other. Internal research papers, whistleblower reports and court filings have shown that these companies have created advanced systems meant to keep users, including kids, on their platforms as long as possible, regardless of the psychological cost.

Features such as infinite scrolling, variable reward notifications, algorithmic content amplification, and engagement-based ranking are not accidental design choices. These techniques are drawn from behavioral psychology and have been calibrated to trigger compulsive use in users’ developing brains. The National Institutes of Health has published peer-reviewed research on how social media’s reward mechanisms activate dopamine pathways associated with substance dependence, especially in adolescents whose brains are still developing.

What makes these lawsuits significant is that the companies involved were aware of the potential harm. Internal studies by Meta, for instance, showed that Instagram could be damaging to the mental health and body image of teenage girls – yet the company continued to use and refine engagement systems. This knowledge is central to the legal argument: these harms are not unexpected. They are predictable results of intentional design decisions made in pursuit of advertising revenue.

Injuries Arkansas Families Are Pursuing in Court

Lawsuits for social media addiction cover a wide range of physical, mental, and behavioral harms. These injuries are very bad and often need long-term care. In some cases, they have even been fatal. Families in Arkansas who may be able to file claims are those whose children had:

Severe depression and major depressive episodes that require hospitalization or intensive outpatient treatment.
Extreme anxiety and panic disorders, including social anxiety that is triggered or exacerbated by platform use.
Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) resulting from exposure to violent, exploitative, or traumatic content.
Eating disorders and body dysmorphia linked to algorithmically amplified diet culture and idealized body images.
Self-harming behaviors tied to online communities that normalize or encourage cutting, burning, or other forms of self-injury.
Suicidal ideation or attempts connected to cyberbullying, social comparison, or online exploitation.
Sexual exploitation or abuse facilitated by platform features that enable contact between minors and adult predators.
Accidental death tied to dangerous viral challenges promoted and amplified by platform algorithms.

Basic Qualifying Criteria for a Social Media Addiction Claim

Used Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, YouTube, or Snapchat
Used the platform more than 3 hours per day
Began using the platform before age 18
No older than 25 years of age at the time of signing
Suffered a documented injury, including severe depression, anxiety, PTSD, eating disorders, body dysmorphia, self-harm, suicide attempts, drug overdose, sexual exploitation, or accidental death connected to online challenges

Your Little Rock Social Media Addiction Attorneys

Edward O. Moody, P.A., has served clients in Arkansas for over four decades. We believe that corporations, no matter how large or powerful, must be held accountable for the harm they cause to the public through their products. We have fought for justice for victims of asbestos exposure and defective products, as well as other corporate wrongdoings, and we are committed to pursuing justice in social media addiction cases as well.

We understand that these cases involve difficult and painful circumstances. Families who come to us often spend months or years watching their child struggle before realizing that social media may be a contributing factor. We approach every case with care, compassion, and the same level of legal expertise that has defined our firm for over 40 years.

If your child has been injured by algorithmically designed addiction, we would like to hear your story. Please contact us for a confidential consultation.